Putin is losing one of his most important qualities (on the international stage, if not in Russia). He’s degrading the mystique of his power: his reputation for tactical brilliance, the competence of the military he commands and his media influence. He’s cut himself down to size.
Michael Kimmage
4,033 posts
Director of the Kennan Institute @kennaninstitute. Senior nonresident fellow at the Brookings Institution @brookingsFP.
- Replying to @MacaesBrunoFraming wars as battles between civilization and barbarism has often brought Europe closer to barbarism than to civilization.
- A @ForeignAffairs essay on Russia and China, in the shadow of Russia’s terrible war, by one of the greatest living Cold War historians: underscores unstated (by Beijing) fact that this war is bad for China; a very plausible line of argument.
- Essential reading on the war from S Kotkin. Unrelievedly tough minded and bleak, though notable that having students “to harangue” is part of what SK sees as the good life.
- One of the best predictors of a country's foreign policy is the true nature of the government that conducts it. In this @wsj essay, I look at the pattern behind Putinism, in which violence, extortion and coercion have come to occupy a pivotal place.
- Delighted to be joining the superb team at @kennaninstitute, a storied institution, as its new director and to begin the @TheWilsonCenter work of connecting first-rate scholarship and expert analysis to the policy-making process. wilsoncenter.org/article/wilson…
- Honored to add my essay, "Failure to Deter: US Policy toward Ukraine and Russia from 1991 until February 24, 2022," to this superb edited volume, "War in Ukraine," just put out by @HalBrands. Available free for all who wish to read it. muse.jhu.edu/pub/1/oa_edite…Replying to @HalBrandsThe essays cover the origins of the war, the course of the fighting, and the global dimensions and implications. Contributors include @LawDavF @anneapplebaum @McFaul @KofmanMichael @BrianTHart, @KoriSchake @MassDara @mkimmage @AKendallTaylor @markhleonard @dandrezner
- Western unity is impressive. Yet the West’s strategic goals need to be defined. Western sanctions policy has become - tacitly - one of regime change or of a leadership change within the regime. Meanwhile, Putin won’t scale back the war: for as long as he rules he will escalate.
- It was an honor to speak with a hero of mine, Terry Gross of @nprfreshair, on the war in Ukraine, on its causes and - speculatively of course - on its consequences. The interview will air on @NPR today.TODAY: What would it mean if Russia wins in Ukraine? If the Kremlin gains control of part or all of Ukraine, what would that mean for Ukraine, Europe and the U.S.? We talk with @mkimmage, who oversaw the Ukraine/Russia portfolio in the State Dept.
- I am delighted to join @CSIS as a senior associate, to work with new colleagues on issues related to Europe, the former Soviet Union and the transatlantic relationship and to reconstitute a bit of S/P with @maxbergmann and @CharlesEdel.
- The room in which George Kennan developed the ideas behind containment, and still in use: hence the computer and post-1947 office chair. The value of looking through big windows.
- My review of the superb new book, The Russo-Ukrainian War, by @SPlokhy. It is not just a major work of historical analysis but a text of great relevance to policy makers, outlining a new Europe forged in war and riven by rival national ideas.
- I'm glad to announce that my history of the war's origins, COLLISION: THE WAR IN UKRAINE AND THE ORIGINS OF THE NEW GLOBAL INSTABILITY, is forthcoming with Oxford University Press in spring 2024, an effort to understand how we arrived at this tragedy. @OxUniPress @Trident_Media
- Noting the arrival of my forthcoming book, Collisions: The War in Ukraine and the Origins of the New Global Instability, due out with @OxUniPress on February 24, 2024, a book about the war’s origins and (some of) its global implications. global.oup.com/academic/produ…




